President Biden tried to shore up his crumbling bipartisan infrastructure deal in the face of Republican fury Saturday — by claiming that he didn’t mean to say he’d hold the legislation hostage to a monster $4 trillion social-spending bill that Democrats could pass on a party-line vote.

“That statement understandably upset some Republicans,” Biden admitted in a lengthy statement, two days after he told reporters “I’m not signing” the bipartisan deal “if this is the only thing that comes to me.”

“My comments,” Biden said Saturday, “created the impression that I was issuing a veto threat on the very plan I had just agreed to, which was certainly not my intent.”

On Thursday, Biden and a group of 10 moderate Republican and Democrat senators celebrated outside the White House as they announced a $1.2 trillion, eight-year package of traditional infrastructure projects like roads, bridges and utility systems.

But hours later, amid left-wing Democrats’ protests, Biden appeared to renege on the deal.

In a second appearance Thursday, Biden said he would let the infrastructure bill stall unless Congress passed a second, much larger bill stuffed with tax hikes and social spending measures that Republicans bitterly oppose — and that Senate Dems could pass on their own under budget reconciliation rules.

“If they don’t come, I’m not signing it. Real simple,” Biden said.

The apparent bait-and-switch led some Republicans, including South Carolina Sen. Lindsey Graham, to bail on the deal.

Sen. Lindsey Graham was not pleased with the flip-flopping on the infrastructure deal.
Sarah Silbiger/Pool via AP

“I don’t mind bipartisanship, but I’m not going to do a suicide mission,” Graham told Politico.

“I think my members think they needed the chiropractor because they got whiplash after watching the president yesterday,” House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.) said Friday — calling the presidential switcheroo “disingenuous in every shape or form.”

Source Article from https://nypost.com/2021/06/26/biden-walks-back-threat-to-hold-infrastructure-bill-hostage/

Government officials, wildlife managers and utility workers across the Pacific north-west were trying to keep people and animals safe as a historic heat wave scorched the region on Saturday.

Portland, Oregon, had its hottest day ever recorded – reaching 108F (42.2C) on Saturday afternoon, according to the National Weather Service. The previous record for Oregon’s largest city was 107F (41.7C), a mark hit in 1965 and 1981.

Seattle reached 101F (38.3C) by mid-afternoon Saturday, making it the hottest June day on record and only the fourth time in recorded history the usually temperate city had topped 100 degrees, according to the National Weather Service.

Other cities and towns from eastern Washington state to Portland to southern Oregon were also expected to break records, with temperatures in many areas expected to reach 30F above normal.

It is a dangerous forecast for a region accustomed to mild weather, and where many people don’t have air conditioning.

Three women participate in the Capitol Hill Pride march in soaring heat in Seattle on Saturday. Photograph: Karen Ducey/Reuters

The hot weather had berry farmers scrambling to pick crops before they rot on the vine and fisheries managers working to keep endangered sockeye salmon safe from too-warm river water.

Stores sold out of portable air conditioners and fans, some hospitals canceled outdoor vaccination clinics, cities opened cooling centers, baseball teams canceled or moved up weekend games, and utilities braced for possible power outages.

Officials in Multnomah county, Oregon, which encompasses Portland, warned that highs well above 100F could cause public transportation delays, strain emergency medical services and cause power outages.

On a short video posted online, the county’s health officer, Dr Jennifer Vines, urged residents to go to a cooling center if they do not have air conditioning, warning that the area is in for “life-threatening” heat. Officials were asking for volunteers to help staff the centers.

Boys cool off at a splash park at the Georgetown Playfield in Seattle on 26 June. Photograph: Karen Ducey/Reuters

In Portland, forecasters said the thermometer could soar to 108F (42 C) by Sunday, breaking an all-time record of 107 F (42 C) set in 1981. Unusually hot weather was expected to extend into next week for much of the region.

Seattle had only hit 100F three times in recorded history before Saturday, the National Weather Service said, and there was a chance it could eclipse the record of 103 F (39 C) on Monday.

“If you’re keeping a written list of the records that will fall, you might need a few pages by early next week,” NWS Seattle tweeted.

James Bryant, a Seattle resident, picked up an air conditioner in anticipation of the extreme heat.

“My house is already hot, and so with the added heat over the next few days, I’ve got kids I got to make sure they don’t get too hot as well,” Bryant said. “It seems to be a trend … So I’m not sure what’s driving it, but it’s not fun that’s for sure.”

Washington governor Jay Inslee lifted Covid-19 restrictions on publicly owned or operated and non-profit cooling centers in light of the heat. Capacity is currently limited to 50% until the state fully reopens next Wednesday.

In Oregon, governor Kate Brown suspended capacity limits for movie theaters and shopping malls – places with air-conditioning – as well as swimming pools ahead of a statewide reopening Wednesday.

The sweltering temperatures expected on the final weekend of the US Olympic Track and Field trials in Eugene, Oregon, also prompted USA Track and Field to reschedule several weekend events to times earlier in the day to avoid the peak heat.

The extended “heat dome” over the Pacific north-west was a taste of the future as climate change reshapes weather patterns worldwide, said Kristie Ebi, a professor at the University of Washington who studies global warming and its effects on public health.

Pacific Power, which serves 10 states, said in a statement that it did not anticipate heat-related service interruptions but asked customers to use less energy during the heat wave.

The NWS also warned that the dry and breezy conditions could also lead to elevated fire weather concerns through early next week.

Source Article from https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2021/jun/27/portland-records-hottest-ever-day-as-heatwave-scorches-pacific-north-west

It’s hot. He’s not.

New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio is getting dragged on Twitter for bragging about enjoying the Big Apple’s summer weather as violent crime soars and residents are moving out in droves.

“The future of New York City is so bright I gotta wear shades!” the progressive politician tweeted, days after city primary voters appear to have rejected his legacy by choosing a moderate, ex-NYPD captain as their next likely mayoral candidate. (The primary vote is not fully tabulated, with the city’s new ranked-choice votes not yet counted.)

New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio is getting dragged on Twitter for bragging about enjoying the Big Apple’s summer weather as violent crime soars and residents are moving out in droves. (NYC Mayor’s Office)

It was de Blasio’s second attempt on the subject, after deleting a similar tweet and being mocked over the reflection of what appeared to be a woman’s T-shirted chest reflected in his mirrored sunglasses.

The original photo was taken down. (New York City Mayor’s Office)

“The future isn’t so bright for these kids,” one Twitter user replied, linking to a news story about a horrific daylight shooting in which a masked gunman murdered a man on a public street just inches away from two terrified children. “But for a pompous blowhard like you, I’m sure it’s great.”

NYC MURDER CAUGHT ON VIDEO IN BROAD DAYLIGHT

In Brooklyn, four suspects are being sought for allegedly vandalizing a George Floyd memorial with White nationalist graffiti. The city’s famous Pride parade banned gay police officers from participating this year. And a city gang boss wanted for murder since March allegedly killed another man on Tuesday.

The only thing bright is arguably the broad daylight under which many of these crimes have taken place.

A Jeep veered onto a Bronx sidewalk last week, mowing down a family of six, according to the New York Post. A fight in Manhattan that same day left a man with a stab wound to the stomach before the suspect hopped in a car and crashed it four blocks away.

Not to mention a campaign volunteer for Eric Adams, the ex-cop and leading Democratic mayoral primary candidate, was stabbed in the Bronx over the weekend.

New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio’s Flickr account includes this photo of his blue Bermuda shorts and sandals. (NYC Mayor’s Office)

And the storied Greenwich Village neighborhood, where an average home costs $1.3 million, police say crime and anarchy are rampant: A bike-riding bandit allegedly snuck into an apartment through a 10-year-old girl’s window and rubbed his penis on her feet.

Not even the area around Central Park is safe. Surveillance video recorded the afternoon execution of a 20-year-old man in a car between Lexington and Park Avenues just a few weeks ago.

But de Blasio didn’t appear to have any of that on his mind when he was photographed wearing a peach-colored Hawaiian shirt and Bermuda shorts in a series of photos celebrating the reopening of the city’s public pools.

New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio enjoying a game of cornhole with some city kids. (NYC Mayor’s Office)

Another photo showed him playing a leisurely game of cornhhole with a couple of children, showing off his suntan, or lack thereof.

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“You should consider bleaching your teeth too,” one Twitter user replied. “#cornnuts.”

De Blasio’s office did not immediately respond to a Fox News request for comment.

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/us/new-york-city-mayor-de-blasio-bright-future

At least 35 of the 159 people still missing after the terrifying condo collapse in south Florida are thought to be Jewish, and Israel has sent crews from Tel Aviv to help the rescue effort.

Search-and-rescue teams from Israel arrived in Florida to search for survivors in the ruins of what is left of the 12-story building, WPLG reported Saturday. Mexico sent a team as well, Reuters reported.

Volunteers with Hatzalah, an emergency medical service organization for Jewish communities around the world, also came to the site to support local firefighters and rescue workers, according to reports.

Israel is also providing food, clothes, medication and other aid for the rescue effort, Israel’s Consul General Maor Elbaz-Starinsky told The Times of Israel Friday.

Elbaz-Starinsky said more than two dozen of the missing were Jewish and had links to Israel. It was not immediately clear if any were Israeli citizens. Some are believed to be Orthodox Jews from Russia, he said.

“To see the agony, the pain, the worry … we see also how hope slowly … diminishes,” Elbaz-Starinsky said about the time he was spending with relatives needing support.

The Miami-Dade Rescue team uses construction vehicles to pick up heavy debris left behind after the partial condo collapse in Surfside, Fla., on June 26, 2021.
Cristobal Herrera Ulashkevich/EPA

The 12-story apartment building partially collapsed and “pancaked” early Thursday near Miami. What caused the 40-year-old building to collapse in a matter of seconds remains unknown.

An orthodox Jewish organization called Chesed Shel Emes, Hebrew for “kindness from truth,” was also on standby at the site to help with rescue efforts, the Sun-Sentinel reported.

The group’s goal is to recover all parts of the body, from blood to human tissue, that must be buried according to Jewish religious law. They hope to begin searching once they get permission from the authorities.

Israeli President Reuven Rivlin said he was praying for the victims.

“Our prayers are with the families anxiously waiting for news of their loved ones in Miami. We hope for the recovery of the survivors and send heartfelt condolences to those who have lost family members,” Rivlin said.

Israeli Prime Minister Naftali Bennett deployed a team that includes Israeli Diaspora Affairs Minister Nachman Shai, who plans to travel to Surfside Saturday night.

Source Article from https://nypost.com/2021/06/26/florida-jewish-community-hit-hard-by-condo-building-collapse/

Temperatures in the Pacific Northwest will skyrocket in the coming days as a heatwave sets in from Southern California to Northern Washington. The high-pressure system is expected to break record temperatures.

National Weather Service


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National Weather Service

The Pacific Northwest will grapple with a dangerous and unprecedented heat wave this weekend. Record highs are expected with temperatures projected to climb to over 100 degrees. Excessive heat warnings are in effect for the upcoming week in Washington, Oregon, Idaho and parts of California and western Nevada.

The National Weather Service said an “anomalously strong” mid-to-upper level ridge, which is typically accompanied by warm, dry weather, will drive the sharp climb in temperatures in the Northwest this weekend and into the week. The high-pressure system will likely bring record highs along with record-high minimum temperatures over the coming days.

In Seattle, the previous all-time record of 105 degrees will be broken when temperatures reach 107 Sunday. Meanwhile, Portland, Ore., is expected to reach 110, three degrees hotter than the previous record of 107 seen in downtown Portland in 1942 and at the city’s airport in 1965 and 1981.

From San Diego to Seattle, all the way to western Nevada and over more than half of Idaho, temperatures are anticipated to break daily, monthly and all-time records.

“Much of this area will see high temperatures 30 to 35 degrees hotter than average and morning low temperatures 20 to 25 degrees warmer than average over the next several days,” the NWC announcement read. “In many locations, the morning lows will be greater than the average high temperatures illustrating the anomalous nature of this historic heatwave.”

The last time a heat wave similar to this hit the area was in 2009. Back then, the region climbed to 101 to 106 degrees for two to four days, while temperatures over 90 lingered for eight to 10 days, the NWS said.

In Southern California, heat warnings are in effect from Sunday morning through Monday evening for the mountain and desert areas east of Los Angeles. Temperatures in Palm Springs hit 112 degrees Saturday, with the weekend high expected to peak at 115 Sunday. However, ridiculously hot temperatures aren’t out of the ordinary for that particular city.

The NWS advises those in areas experiencing treacherously high temperatures to stay hydrated, reduce outdoor activities and avoid prolonged exposure to the sun.

Also, never leave children or pets unattended in hot vehicles. Five children between the ages of 5 months and 2 years have already died this year as a result of being left unattended in hot vehicles. According to the national nonprofit Kids In Cars, an average of 39 children are killed in hot cars every year.

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2021/06/26/1010610240/record-heat-wave-set-to-scorch-pacific-northwest-to-southern-california

A hot air balloon crashed in Albuquerque, N.M., on Saturday morning, killing four people.

The Cameron 0-120 hot air balloon crashed after hitting power lines six miles from the Albuquerque International Sunport airport, the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) told The Hill in a statement.

The hot air balloon tcrashed into a street and caught on fire, the FAA said.

The crash resulted in the deaths of four people, police spokesman Gilbert Gallegos said, according to the Chicago Tribune.

The identities of the victims have not yet been released, nor has the condition of the person who was injured.

The crash also resulted in 13,000 homes losing power due to the power lines being down, police said.

The FAA and National Transportation Safety Board are investigating the incident along with local authorities.

Gallegos said that although those who fly the hot air balloon are trained professionals, the balloons can be difficult to manage, especially in windy conditions.

“Our balloonists tend to be very much experts at navigating, but sometimes we have these types of tragic accidents,” he said.

Albuquerque is known for its hot air balloon rides, as it holds a hot air balloon festival that thousands of people travel to see every year.

Source Article from https://thehill.com/homenews/state-watch/560397-hot-air-balloon-crash-kills-4-in-new-mexico

Five people died after a hot air balloon hit power lines in New Mexico’s largest city on Saturday, police said.

The crash happened around 7am on Albuquerque’s west side, police spokesman Gilbert Gallegos said. No identities were immediately released but fire officials said three males, including the pilot, and two females died.

Four people were pronounced dead at the scene and the fifth died after being taken to hospital in critical condition, Gallegos said.

The multi-colored balloon skirted the top of the power lines, sending at least one dangling and knocking out power to more than 13,000 homes, Gallegos said.

The gondola fell about 100ft and crashed in the median of a busy street, catching fire, the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) said. Bystanders frantically called for a fire extinguisher, video posted online showed.

The envelope of the balloon floated away, eventually landing on a residential rooftop, Gallegos said. The FAA did not immediately have registration details for the balloon but identified it as a Cameron 0-120.

Authorities had not determined what caused the crash. The FAA and National Transportation Safety Board were investigating.

Gallegos said hot air balloons can be difficult to manage, particularly when the wind kicks up.

“Our balloonists tend to be very much experts at navigating, but sometimes we have these types of tragic accidents,” he said.

Albuquerque is a center for ballooning. The city hosts a nine-day event in October that draws hundreds of thousands of spectators and pilots. It is one of the most photographed events globally.

Residents are treated to colorful displays of balloons floating over homes and along the Rio Grande throughout the year.

In January, a passenger in a hot air balloon outside Albuquerque was ejected from the gondola after a hard landing, according to the NTSB. He died from his injuries.

In 2016 in Texas, a hot air balloon hit high-tension power lines before crashing into a pasture. All 16 people on board died. Federal authorities said it was the worst such disaster in US history.

Source Article from https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2021/jun/26/new-mexico-hot-air-balloon-crash-albuquerque

Tornado Tracker: see where tornadoes are popping up across Michigan

WHITE LAKE, MI — The National Weather Service reported a tornado spotted on radar in central Michigan on Saturday afternoon.

The tornado was spotted near Remus, about 10 miles southeast of Mecosta, and was moving northeast at 30 mph, the National Weather Service stated at 3:46 p.m. on Saturday, June 26. It is unclear if the tornado touched down in the area.

At the time, the NWS stated flying debris would be dangerous to those caught outside and that mobile homes would be damaged or destroyed. The tornado was expected to be near Lake Isabella around 4:05 p.m., Rosebush around 4:30 p.m., Farwell around 4:35 p.m., and Clare around 4:40 p.m.

However, shortly after emitting the initial advisory, the NWS reported the storm weakened and tornado warnings in Mecosta, Clare, and Isabella counties were canceled.

“The storm which prompted the warning has weakened below severe limits, and no longer appears capable of producing a tornado,” the NWS stated. “Therefore, the warning has been cancelled. However, gusty winds and lightning are still possible with this thunderstorm.”

A tornado watch remains in effect until 8 p.m. for central Michigan. Several other areas of the state also remain under a tornado watch as heavy storms pass through.

Read more:

Severe storm chances increase for Michigan: hail, damaging winds, tornado risk

The Detroit area has seen a lot of street flooding and reports of flooded basements since Friday

Gov. Whitmer declares state of emergency for Wayne County after heavy rainfall

Source Article from https://www.mlive.com/news/2021/06/tornado-spotted-on-radar-in-central-michigan.html

More than 90% of the American West is in the grip of a historic and life-threatening drought – and summer 2021 is just beginning.

A map of the severe conditions released Thursday by the U.S. Drought Monitor – which was started in 2000 and is produced through a partnership of the University of Nebraska-Lincoln’s National Drought Mitigation Center, the U.S. Department of Agriculture and National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration – showed the vast region in dire straits.

PACIFIC NORTHWEST BAKES IN HISTORIC HEAT WAVE, WILDFIRE RISKS SOAR

NOAA’s National Integrated Drought Information System (NIDIS) reported that for the third consecutive week, “extreme” and “exceptional” drought levels have set a record, with 49.7% of the West in that category.

“The high prior to the 2020/2021 drought was July 23, 2002, at 45.3%,” the agency noted in a tweet.

More than 58 million people are impacted as the now more than two-decade-long drought worsens and multiple governors have declared states of emergency as temperatures and wildfire risk increase.

Intense, heat has plagued the West in recent weeks, baking already brittle vegetation, drying up worryingly empty reservoirs and smashing temperature records.

NOAA’s climate page described drought and heat as “natural dance partners,” with drought exacerbated when temperatures soar and vice versa.

A June 17 study published in the journal Nature Climate Change showed soil moisture has trended lower on the hottest days in the Southwest.

HISTORIC DROUGHT IN WEST BRINGS IN PLAGUE OF GRASSHOPPERS

Drought is also driven by La Niña conditions, which were in place through winter 2020 to 2021.

NOAA noted that there is evidence climate change has played a hand in creating this reality – with heat waves occurring more often and lasting longer since the 1960s and temperatures rising steadily due to the release of greenhouse gases.

Scientists warned last year that the worst-ever climate-spurred “megadroughts” could devastate the West, based on 1,200 years of tree ring data, modern weather observations and 31 advanced climate models.

Rick Thielmann, chief pilot at the Nevada Department of Wildlife, releases water using a “Bambi Bucket” at the “flipper” guzzler in the Muddy Mountains, in Clark County, Nev., Tuesday, June 8, 2021, during an emergency water haul operation. While the guzzlers are primarily utilized to assist the bighorn sheep population in the area, they also provide water for a variety of animals that populate the area. (Chase Stevens/Las Vegas Review-Journal via AP)

Going back more than a thousand years, there is evidence that naturally driven megadroughts have laid waste to the region several times — often leading to social upheavals among indigenous civilizations.

Residents have been told to brace for impact and are advised to take precautionary measures this summer to help protect themselves from a myriad of worries.

Grasshoppers, which thrive in warm and arid weather have taken over and are beginning to denude trees.

A number of cities in Utah have banned fireworks ahead of the Fourth of July, worried about sparking devastating wildfires.

The Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife is reportedly considering relocating some fish species to save them and doing away with bag limits for recreational anglers.

New Mexico parks officials have closed boat ramps throughout the state as reservoirs dry up.

Water supply is a common problem across the West, with 1,500 critical California reservoirs lower than half of what they should be this time of year and Idaho water managers cutting off irrigation flows to farmers. Thousands of farmers in the Golden State have been warned that they could face a similar fate.

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Utah Gov. Spencer Cox urged residents and businesses to cut down on water usage, issuing multiple drought-related executive orders.

“We’re slowing down on our press conferences about the pandemic, and we’re headed right into another disaster,” Cox told reporters earlier in June. “It’s been that kind of year for the state of Utah.”

“The hots are getting a lot hotter in this state, the dries are getting a lot drier,” California Gov. Gavin Newsom told the media in May. “We have a conveyance system, a water system, that was designed for a world that no longer exists.”

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/us/more-than-90-of-the-western-us-threatened-by-historic-drought-that-may-stretch-through-summer

Nearly three years before a Florida condo tower collapsed, an engineer warned that the building’s failed waterproofing of its pool deck was causing “major structural damage,” according to filings.

Champlain Towers South, the 12-story condominium tower in Surfside, Florida, partially collapsed in the middle of the night on Thursday. The death toll has risen to four people, while 159 remain missing.

Officials said Saturday at a news conference that fire and smoke coming from deep inside the remains of the tower is slowing down the search. As rescue efforts continue, the city of Surfside has released a number of documents about the building.

Among the filings released by Surfside authorities late Friday is a 2018 field survey report from Morabito Consultants, which found that the concrete structural slab underneath the building’s pool needed repairs.

“Failure to replace the waterproofing in the near future will cause the extent of the concrete deterioration to expand exponentially,” the report said.

The firm recommended replacing the damaged slabs. It also found “abundant cracking and spalling” in the concrete columns, beams and walls of the parking garage. The tower was built in 1981.

The report did not warn of any imminent danger, and it’s still unknown what caused the building’s collapse. Surfside Mayor Charles Burkett told CNN that he had not seen the 2018 structural field survey report but said it’s “unclear right now exactly what was going on in that building.” According to The New York Times, the report helped shape plans for a multimillion dollar repair project that was set to start soon.

Burkett said during a news conference that he’s working on a plan to relocate occupants of Champlain Towers North, which was built the same year. FEMA has agreed to pay for lodging. City officials are still gathering more information on Champlain Towers East, which is built in a different style and probably constructed at a different time.

CNBC has reached out to Morabito Consultants for comment.

Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2021/06/26/engineer-found-major-structural-damage-to-florida-condo-tower-before-collapse.html

Five people died after a hot air balloon hit power lines in New Mexico’s largest city on Saturday, police said.

The crash happened around 7am on Albuquerque’s west side, police spokesman Gilbert Gallegos said. No identities were immediately released but fire officials said three males, including the pilot, and two females died.

Four people were pronounced dead at the scene and the fifth died after being taken to hospital in critical condition, Gallegos said.

The multi-colored balloon skirted the top of the power lines, sending at least one dangling and knocking out power to more than 13,000 homes, Gallegos said.

The gondola fell about 100ft and crashed in the median of a busy street, catching fire, the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) said. Bystanders frantically called for a fire extinguisher, video posted online showed.

The envelope of the balloon floated away, eventually landing on a residential rooftop, Gallegos said. The FAA did not immediately have registration details for the balloon but identified it as a Cameron 0-120.

Authorities had not determined what caused the crash. The FAA and National Transportation Safety Board were investigating.

Gallegos said hot air balloons can be difficult to manage, particularly when the wind kicks up.

“Our balloonists tend to be very much experts at navigating, but sometimes we have these types of tragic accidents,” he said.

Albuquerque is a center for ballooning. The city hosts a nine-day event in October that draws hundreds of thousands of spectators and pilots. It is one of the most photographed events globally.

Residents are treated to colorful displays of balloons floating over homes and along the Rio Grande throughout the year.

In January, a passenger in a hot air balloon outside Albuquerque was ejected from the gondola after a hard landing, according to the NTSB. He died from his injuries.

In 2016 in Texas, a hot air balloon hit high-tension power lines before crashing into a pasture. All 16 people on board died. Federal authorities said it was the worst such disaster in US history.

Source Article from https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2021/jun/26/new-mexico-hot-air-balloon-crash-albuquerque

Britain’s Health Secretary Matt Hancock speaks during a coronavirus media briefing on in London on May 27. He resigned in a letter to Prime Minister Boris Johnson that was released Saturday.

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Britain’s Health Secretary Matt Hancock speaks during a coronavirus media briefing on in London on May 27. He resigned in a letter to Prime Minister Boris Johnson that was released Saturday.

Matt Dunham/AP

LONDON (AP) — U.K. Health Secretary Matt Hancock, who has led the country’s response to the coronavirus, resigned Saturday, a day after apologizing for breaching social distancing rules with an aide with whom he was allegedly having an affair.

Hancock had been under growing pressure since the tabloid Sun newspaper published images showing him and senior aide Gina Coladangelo kissing in an office at the Department of Health. The Sun said the closed circuit television images were taken May 6 — 11 days before lockdown rules were eased to allow hugs and other physical contact with people outside one’s own household.

In a resignation letter to Prime Minister Boris Johnson, Hancock said the government owed it “to people who have sacrificed so much in this pandemic to be honest when we have let them down.”

“And those of us who make these rules have got to stick by them and that’s why I’ve got to resign,” he wrote.

Johnson said he was sorry to receive Hancock’s resignation and that he “should leave office very proud of what you have achieved — not just in tackling the pandemic, but even before COVID-19 struck us.”

Johnson had earlier expressed confidence in Hancock despite widespread calls to fire him.

Jonathan Ashworth, health spokesman for the opposition Labour Party, said “it is right that Matt Hancock has resigned. But why didn’t Boris Johnson have the guts to sack him and why did he say the matter was closed?”

Some lawmakers from the governing Conservatives had also called on Hancock to quit because he wasn’t practicing what he has been preaching during the pandemic.

“The last thing I would want is for my private life to distract attention from the single-minded focus that is leading us out of this crisis,” Hancock, who is married, said in his letter of resignation.

“I want to reiterate my apology for breaking the guidance, and apologize to my family and loved ones for putting them through this,” he said. “I also need (to) be with my children at this time.”

Hancock, 42, is the latest in a string of British officials to be accused of breaching restrictions they imposed on the rest of the population to curb the spread of the coronavirus.

The government is also facing questions about the circumstances in which Hancock hired Coladangelo, a university friend who was appointed to his department last year. She was initially employed as an unpaid adviser and this year became a non-executive director at the Department of Health, a role that pays about 15,000 pounds ($21,000) a year.

Johnson’s Conservative government has been branded a “chumocracy” by critics for hiring special advisers and contractors from outside the civil service without long-customary levels of scrutiny.

Hancock’s department has been accused of waiving procurement rules to award lucrative contracts for protective equipment and other medical essentials, often to personal contacts. Hancock has said he was driven by the need to secure essential supplies quickly at the height of the outbreak.

Hancock has faced weeks of pressure since the prime minister’s former top aide, Dominic Cummings, accused him of botching the government’s response to the pandemic. Cummings, now a bitter critic of the government he once served, told lawmakers last month that Hancock “should have been fired” for alleged lies and errors. He also published a WhatsApp message in which Johnson branded Hancock “totally (expletive) hopeless.”

Cummings himself was accused of breaking the rules and undermining the government’s “stay home” message when he drove 250 miles (400 kilometers) across England to his parents’ home during the spring 2020 lockdown. Johnson resisted pressure to fire him, but Cummings left his job in November amid a power struggle in the prime minister’s office.

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2021/06/26/1010588807/uk-health-minister-resigns-kissing-coronavirus-rules

CHICAGO (CBS) — Tornado warnings were issued for parts of the Chicago area during the midday hours Saturday amid severe storms that also brought pouring, drenching rain.

After a couple hours of relative calm, a new string of tornado warnings was issued for parts of Will, Kankakee, Grundy, and Livingston counties until 4:30 p.m.

READ MORE: LIVE UPDATES: Severe Weather Brings Tornado Warnings, Drenching Rain To Chicago Area; Possible Tornado Near Crete

A tornado warning was subsequently issued for southeast Cook County, east central Will County, and west central Lake County, Indiana until 5 p.m.

The rotating storms were likely wrapped in rain with the torrential downpours as they headed northeast. The rotation is tighter with this system than some of the earlier ones.

A couple of hours earlier, a tornado warning was issued for southern Cook County as well as Will County and Lake County, Indiana until 2:45 p.m.

Earlier, a tornado warning was issued for parts of the City of Chicago; it expired at 12:15 p.m.

The National Weather Service reported that at 11:49 a.m., a severe thunderstorm capable of producing a tornado was spotted over East Garfield Park and West Town.

The system moved northeast toward Lakeview, Uptown and Edgewater. The NWS reported the rotation moved out over the northern part of the Loop area.

CBS 2 Meteorologist Robb Ellis reported rotation was seen moving over the Eisenhower and Kennedy expressways, but went on to move out over Lake Michigan.

READ MORE: Severe Storms Rip Down Trees In Northwest Indiana

However, the warning was kept in place for several minutes afterward for Central Cook County due to concerns about rotation in Forest View.

A flash flood warning has also been issued for parts of the eastern Cook, central DuPage, and northwest Will County until 6:15 p.m.

Heavy pouring rain persisted as of noon throughout the area, including Woodridge and Naperville – which were hit by an EF-3 tornado just this past Sunday.

A separate tornado warning was issued for southwest Will County just to the south and east of Joliet until noon, and a third was issued for southern Grundy County and Livingston County until 12:30 p.m.

Ellis reported the Grundy County storm system had the most severe rotation and was the most dangerous of the systems.

Gusty winds were also seen from O’Hare International Airport to Bloomingdale, which Ellis identified as areas of concern.

A tornado watch was also issued for Cook County and parts south and east until 7 p.m., and a flash flood watch has been issued for the entire Chicago area with the exception of Lake County through Sunday morning.

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Ellis reported more tornado warnings are possible throughout the afternoon, though he does not expect any storms on the level of last Sunday.

Source Article from https://chicago.cbslocal.com/2021/06/26/chicago-weather-alert-tornado-warning-parts-of-city-of-chicago/

CHICAGO — Officials with the World Health Organization are urging for continued public health measures — including the wearing of masks for vaccinated individuals — as the SARS-CoV-2 delta variant spreads across the globe.

The variant, first identified in India, is the “most transmissible” of the COVID variants identified thus far, said WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus at a media briefing on Friday.

“As some countries ease public health and social measures, we are starting to see increases in transmission around the world,” Tedros said of the variant, seen now in at least 85 countries. “More cases means more hospitalizations, further stretching health workers and health systems, which increases the risk of death.”

Tedros also blamed increased transmission of the delta variant on the inequitable distribution of vaccines in poorer countries, warning that the same thing happened during the AIDS crisis and the 2009 swine flu pandemic.

Speaking of prevention measures specifically, Dr. Mariângela Simão, the WHO assistant director-general for drug access, vaccines and pharmaceuticals, said at Friday’s briefing that continued health measures are still “super important” even among the vaccinated population. Specifically, Simão said people should be wearing masks “consistently,” practicing social distancing, staying in ventilated spaces, washing hands and avoiding crowds.

“This still continues to be extremely important, even if you’re vaccinated, when you have a community transmission ongoing, which is the case of the Latin America in general,” Simão said. “Now you have a high level of continuous community transmission. So people cannot feel safe just because they’ve had the two doses. They still need to protect themselves.”

Despite Friday’s advisories from WHO, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has not yet changed its guidance for vaccinated individuals. The most recent update on June 17 says fully vaccinated Americans can resume most activities “without wearing a mask or physically distancing, except where required by federal, state, local, tribal, or territorial laws, rules, and regulations, including local business and workplace guidance.”

Meanwhile, during Friday’s WHO briefing, Maria Van Kerkhove, the WHO’s technical lead on COVID-19, pointed to the rising cases of the delta variant in Europe as an example of just how “fragile” the world’s current health situation is.

“There are a lot of events” that are causing numbers to spike in some European countries, Van Kerkhove said, citing sporting events, religious events and even “backyard barbecues” as some of the catalysts.

Van Kerkhove further urged the public to “pull ourselves together” to drive down transmission rates.

“The delta variant, the virus, will continue to evolve. And right now our public health and social measures work, our vaccines work, our diagnostics work, our therapeutics work. But there may be a time where this virus evolves and these countermeasures don’t,” she said.

Van Kerkhove added that the delta variant is just one of four COVID variants of concern, along with seven other variants of interest and a “number of other alerts” about mutations that WHO is tracking.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://wgntv.com/news/who-urges-continued-mask-wearing-even-for-vaccinated-individuals-as-delta-variant-spreads/

Attorney General Merrick Garland announced on Friday that the Justice Department filed a lawsuit challenging several provisions of Georgia’s recently enacted voter suppression law. And the Justice Department has a strong case on the merits against this law.

Yet it is far from clear whether the strength of their case will matter: They will have to litigate this case before a judiciary that is increasingly hostile toward voting rights claims.

The complaint in United States v. Georgia, which is signed by the most senior lawyers in the DOJ’s Civil Rights Division, alleges that several provisions of the Georgia law “were adopted with the purpose of denying or abridging Black citizens’ equal access to the political process, in violation” of the Voting Rights Act.

The DOJ does not attack the entire Georgia law, and it does not directly attack the single most troubling provision of the law, which allows Republican officials to effectively take over local election boards that have the power to close polling places and disqualify voters.

Instead, the lawsuit focuses on several provisions making it harder to cast an absentee ballot in Georgia. It also targets provisions that disenfranchise many voters who cast a ballot in the wrong precinct, as well as the Georgia law’s provision prohibiting pro-democracy groups from distributing food and water to voters waiting in long lines to cast a ballot.

While the lawsuit only argues that these parts of the law violate the Voting Rights Act, it also asks the courts to invoke a rarely used provision of the Act which would place Georgia elections under federal supervision.

Before the Supreme Court’s decision in Shelby County v. Holder (2013), states with a history of racist voting practices, including Georgia, had to “preclear” any new election rules with officials in Washington, DC. Shelby County effectively deactivated this preclearance regime, but a provision of the Voting Rights Act still allows preclearance to be imposed on states that commit particularly egregious discrimination against voters of color.

And if preclearance were reimposed on Georgia, that would likely prevent GOP-controlled election boards from implementing policies intended to disenfranchise Black voters.

In another era, the Georgia lawsuit would have had a very good shot of prevailing. In Village of Arlington Heights v. Metropolitan Housing Development Corp. (1977), the Supreme Court laid out several factors which plaintiffs alleging race discrimination may point to in order to prove their case, including evidence that lawmakers departed from “the normal procedural sequence” that they ordinarily use to enact laws, the fact that a state has a history of racist practices, or the fact that a law’s impact “bears more heavily on one race than another.”

The DOJ’s complaint does an effective job of showing that many of these factors are present in Georgia. Yet while it has strong legal arguments on its side, the courts are now much more conservative than the Supreme Court that decided Arlington Heights — indeed, the current Supreme Court is even more conservative than the one that decided Shelby County.

The Georgia case, moreover, is assigned to Judge J.P. Boulee, a Trump judge.

The Justice Department, in other words, won’t simply need to prove its case, it will also need to overcome a judiciary stacked with judges who tend to be hostile to voting rights claims — and that are particularly hostile to claims that white lawmakers engaged in intentional race discrimination.

That will not be easy.

The Justice Department’s case against Georgia, briefly explained

The DOJ’s complaint lays out a fairly straightforward narrative against the new Georgia law.

Georgia, of course, has a well-documented history of racist practices. Yet, despite that history, Georgia voters elected the state’s first Black senator, Raphael Warnock, in the most recent election cycle. And the state also voted to elect Vice President Kamala Harris, the first African American elected to that office, when it went for President Joe Biden in 2020.

Part of the reason why this historically white supremacist state voted this way — and why the once solidly Republican state now has two Democratic senators — is an influx of Black residents. “The number of Black residents increased 70.7 percent from 1990 to 2010 according to decennial Census counts,” the DOJ explains in its complaint, “and Black residents’ share of Georgia’s total population increased from 26.8 percent of the population in 1990 to 30.6 percent in 2010.”

These Black Georgians were especially likely to use absentee ballots in the 2020 election cycle — so the law’s provisions limiting absentee balloting will have a disproportionate impact on African Americans if this pattern continues into future elections. (Although most of the spike in absentee voting in 2020 can be attributed to the pandemic, Black activists in Georgia have a history of using absentee voting drives to increase turnout.)

Black Georgians have also been much more likely to face long lines when they vote in person, according to the DOJ, which is why a law preventing good Samaritans from providing food and water to people waiting to cast a ballot is likely to have an outsized impact on African Americans.

The state legislature, the DOJ alleges, enacted the new law “with knowledge of the disproportionate effect that these provisions … would have on Black voters’ ability to participate in the political process on an equal basis with white voters.” The law passed without any support from Black lawmakers, and the legislature used an unusually rushed process to pass the bill.

Among other things, the GOP-controlled legislature bypassed the legislative committee that ordinarily would have overseen such a bill, and assigned it instead to a special committee chaired by a lawmaker who’d previously compared the “always-suspect absentee balloting process” to the “shady part of town down near the docks you do not want to wander into because the chance of being shanghaied is significant.”

The legislature also bypassed a process typically requiring such a bill to receive a “fiscal note,” a document laying out the bill’s likely impact on state and county spending.

Taken together, this and other evidence suggests that Georgia’s largely white Republican Party saw their grip on the state slipping away. The state’s Black population was growing, in numbers and in political power, and it just managed to elect a Black senator for the first time in the state’s history.

Faced with this impending loss of power, the DOJ alleges, white state lawmakers intentionally enacted legal provisions that they knew would diminish Black turnout — all in an effort to prevent African Americans from exercising the kind of political power they wielded in 2020.

Why this case faces an uphill climb

Even setting aside the fact that this case will be heard by a Trump-appointed trial judge, and then potentially by a federal appeals court and a Supreme Court dominated by Republican appointees, the DOJ will also have to overcome a raft of recent precedents undermining the Voting Rights Act.

The most harmful of these cases to the DOJ’s chances of prevailing is Abbott v. Perez (2018), a 5-4 Supreme Court decision handed down along party lines.

Perez held that lawmakers accused of acting with racist intent enjoy such a high presumption of racial innocence that few litigants will be able to overcome it. As Justice Samuel Alito wrote for his Court in Perez, “whenever a challenger claims that a state law was enacted with discriminatory intent, the burden of proof lies with the challenger, not the State.”

And Alito also went much further than simply placing the burden of proof on voting rights plaintiffs. The facts of Perez were simply extraordinary, and they suggest that few plaintiffs alleging race discrimination can ever prove their case.

In 2011, Texas enacted congressional maps that a federal court later struck down as an illegal racial gerrymander. In 2012, however, this litigation was still making its way through two separate trial courts, and the state did not have any lawful map that it could use to conduct its congressional elections that year.

Thus, to ensure that Texas could actually hold congressional elections in 2012, a federal judge drew interim maps that incorporated many of the districts that were later struck down. In drawing this temporary map, however, the judge emphasized that “this interim map is not a final ruling on the merits of any claims” that some parts of the map were illegal racial gerrymanders.

Then, in 2013, Texas’s Republican legislature took this interim map and adopted it as its own — effectively attempting to make the temporary map into a permanent map, despite the fact that it included several racially gerrymandered districts. And the Supreme Court upheld this 2013 law in Perez.

The 2013 map, Alito claimed, was “legitimate” because it wasn’t enacted with racist intent. Rather, he argued, it was enacted because Texas “wanted to bring the litigation about the State’s districting plans to an end as expeditiously as possible.”

Alito’s argument, in other words, was that the 2013 maps weren’t enacted to preserve a racial gerrymander; they were enacted to shut down litigation challenging a racial gerrymander. And, in Alito’s mind, that was enough to defeat that litigation.

The upshot of Perez is that the DOJ will now have to argue that the evidence that Georgia’s voter suppression law was enacted with racist intent is even more potent than the unusually compelling evidence of racist intent that was present in the Perez case. The DOJ will have to make that case before a Trump-appointed trial judge. And it may ultimately have to argue its case before a Supreme Court that is even more conservative than the one that decided Perez.

And then, if the Justice Department hopes to stop Georgia Republicans from taking over local election boards and using them to disenfranchise voters, it will have to convince the courts to impose a rarely imposed sanction on Georgia and restore preclearance in that state.

Perhaps the Justice Department can overcome all of these challenges. But the deck is heavily stacked against them, no matter how strong their case may be.

Source Article from https://www.vox.com/2021/6/26/22550825/justice-department-georgia-voter-suppression-merrick-garland-voting-rights-act-united-states